Events.com apps

Brian Copeland’s The Waiting Period

Brian Copeland’s The Waiting Period
Image from themarsh.org
Event ended

Courtesy The MarshWinner 2015 Theater Bay Area Award Outstanding Production of a Solo Play
This show is an unrelenting look at a ten-day period in Copeland’s life—the mandatory ten-day waiting period before he could lay his hands on the newly purchased gun with which he planned to take his own life. Even in the midst of this tragedy, however, his wonderful sense of the comedy of life does not desert him (how much should he spend on the gun?), indeed serves him insidiously well as a buffer against the grim reality of his intention. Copeland hopes this very personal, and ultimately redemptive, story will reach people who struggle with depression—often called the last stigmatized disease—as well as their families and loved ones. Interspersed with interviews with other sufferers, the play, like so many Marsh stories, also offers outsiders an insider’s view, thereby expanding our understanding and, hopefully, our humanity. As critic Sam Hurwitt put it in The Idiolect: “It’s a play I’d strongly recommend to anyone who is now or has ever been depressed or who knows someone in that situation. But honestly, it’s such a strong piece that I’d recommend it just as heartily to anyone who’s ever been human.”
Disclaimer: Please double check event information with the event organizer as events can be canceled, details can change after they are added to our calendar, and errors do occur.

Views - 23/03/2026 Last update
theater
The Marsh (San Francisco)
the marsh san francisco 1062, san francisco, ca
Create an event
Create events for free. They will be immediately recommended to interested users.
Nearby hotels and apartments
the marsh san francisco 1062, san francisco, ca
Discover more events in San Francisco
Discover now
Discover more events in San Francisco
Discover now
The Marsh (San Francisco)
the marsh san francisco 1062, san francisco, ca
Create an event
Create events for free. They will be immediately recommended to interested users.
  1. Brian Copeland’s The Waiting Period
 
 
 
 
Your changes have been saved.